🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦@Reil76
To the people of Alberta,
I hear you. I really do.
The frustration is real. Feels like your province carries more than its share and still gets brushed aside. Watching decisions come out of Ottawa that feel completely disconnected from your reality, your work, your way of life. That kind of anger does not just appear out of nowhere.
But I want to talk to you honestly, not like a politician, more like someone who actually cares how this plays out for you.
Separation sounds good at first. It feels like control. Like finally getting to call your own shots. But the day after a yes vote, reality kicks in, and it does not wait for anyone to catch up.
Suddenly, the markets you have always had full access to is no longer guaranteed. You are on the outside trying to negotiate your way back in. Those trade relationships took decades to build. They do not just reset overnight because Alberta wants them to.
Then there are the everyday things people do not think about right away. Pensions. Passports. Federal funding that helps keep hospitals running and infrastructure moving. None of that disappears instantly, but all of it becomes uncertain. And uncertainty is not just a political word. It shows up as companies holding back, investments slowing down, costs going up, and people wondering what the next few years actually look like.
And this is not something that gets sorted out quickly. Look at Quebec. Decades of referendums and constitutional fights, and they never even left. Look at Scotland. Serious economists were saying it could take at least ten years just to stabilize, and they still voted no.
Alberta would not be simpler. If anything, it would be more complicated. Resource rights, land, debt, pensions, borders. None of that has a clean or fast solution. This could stretch across ten, fifteen years or more. That is a big chunk of your life. That is kids growing up in the middle of uncertainty. That is businesses trying to plan without knowing what the rules will even be a few years down the line.
The people voting yes in a moment of frustration are not always the ones who have to live with that uncertainty long term. That part never makes it onto the slogans.
And here is the thing. Alberta is not powerless in Canada. Not even close. You have one of the strongest economies in the country. You have leverage. You have a voice that can carry weight when it is used properly.
Being ignored does not mean you walk away. It means you push harder. It means you force your way into the conversation and refuse to be sidelined.
You deserve better. That part is not up for debate. But leaving does not fix the problem. It replaces it with a much bigger, much riskier one.
Separation is not a fresh start. It is a long, expensive, uncertain road.
Stay. Push harder. Demand more. And win the argument from a position of strength, not from the outside looking in.